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tv   FOX and Friends Sunday  FOX News  April 14, 2013 3:00am-7:00am PDT

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♪ >> it is six o'clock on the dot. now, today is sunday, april 14th, i'm anna kooiman in for alisyn camerota. gitmo detainees use makeshift weapons to attack guards at guantanamo bay. the latest on a violent confrontation at the u.s. camp in cuba. >> what happened to everybody paying his fair share? the president's tax returns are in and they have h've got a of americans scratching their heads. >> april is trickle down taxation. tax the rain that lands on your property. (laughter)
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"fox & friends" begins right now. ♪ >> umbrella sales just went up. >> clayton: yeah, that's absurd. how can you crawl that? the chinese tried to control the rain and we can't do it. welcome to "fox & friends" and that's tucker carlson and anna kooiman, nice to see you. >> i was watching you with alisyn and other tax loopholes closing, golf courses, right. >> clayton: right. and flavored vodka, apparently. >> tucker: what? i'm losing my flavored vodka? >> and more on flavored vot vodka sales and gabrielle reese, with some controversy,
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you need to be semisive, that's how you need to be feminine in your relationship, you need to be sub missive. >> is this i am woman, hear me roar? >> your taxes have gone up, your taxes have gone up, my taxes have gone up thanks to president obama's plan to soak the paplatiopulation, yet, the president's tax returns are out and he's told a total of 18.4% on taxes. on an income of $611. and the president's plan in the new budget would make a mo mandatory tax with the top percent and he had.
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>> and on the campaign trail, i pay less than taxes than teachers out there. he might be right in part because of the way his effective tax rate he's made less money because of the book deals. >> you remember in 2010, 1.7 million dollars so definitely a decrease there, but we want you to take a listen to the president talking about the fair share and we want to know what you think? is he paying his fair share? >> if everybody is getting a fair shot. everybody has a chance to do better. we can build an economy that gives everybody a fair shot. >> when we talk about everybody paying their fair share, americans who can afford it should pay their fair share. >> if they're playing and shared responsibility, i think that's a fair approach. americans who can't afford it should pay their fair share. >> fair play and shared responsibility. that's what we're about. >> we've got to make sure that
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we've got a tax system that reflects everybody paying their fair share. >> or are we doing better when everybody gets a fair shot. >> tucker: just to be totally clear, 600,000 put the president into the top 1% for earners in this country. he's way above the top 1% threshold. how did he pay 18%? his accountant, can i get your number? >> for all of these, even with adjusted gross income going to charity and donated couple hundred thousand to charity, 150,000 to charity. how does that create adjusted gross income to drop down into an effective tax rate below what receivers make. >> if he wants everybody to pay their fair share and wants everybody to do it, why didn't he just do it. >> tucker: that's the
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question. it's not a matter of economics as the president just said in the clips. it's a moral question, and unpatriotic not to pay the maximum taxes. it's fair, it's a moral question, why doesn't the president pay 30% as he's calling on the rest of us to do. >> like the buffet secretary argument like we heard during the campaign. and obamacare is rolling out in many parts of the country and not fully implemented, but you have a lot of small business owners and large business owners worried about the implementation of the affordable care act. one of those the ceo of home depot who has to deal with a lot of part-time employees and full-time employees and home depot is one of the companies, you go to home depot sort of like starbucks, you go, you have a lot of people who want to work there for a long time because it's a great company
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and provides great benefits, but a company that's going to have to make significant cutbacks as a result of obamacare. >> and he was recently interviewed and said back in 1979 i didn't have all of these hoops to jump through and hurdles and the federal government is getting in the way of small businesses and not showing respect even though the small businesses basically make up 70% of our economy. so, it's an economic engine and they feel like the government's really getting in the way, take a listen. >> obamacare is going to kill off small businesses, there's no question about it, if they're thrown out of their medical plans now, where they're covered in a good medical plan and thrown under the bus, they're going to be destroyed, if in fact they don't stay as full-time employees, and are part-time employees, they're going to be destroyed. they have to understand that the villain is not their employer, the villain is the u.s. government. this is where the villain comes from. it's the--
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it's what happened with the bill that was passed in congress by this administration and subsequent to this administration, but obamacare is the capper, the bullet it the temper. >> tucker: the bullet to the temple, keep in mind the unemployment rate is consistently high. 80% since we've had an unemployment rate this high this long and the question is why haven't recovered from the recession? >> we haven't spent enough. >> tucker: we've regulated a lot of businesses into not hiring, why is it worth it for home depot, starbucks, by the way, big supporters of the united states, and hiring full-time when each comes with a list of mandates and costs, it's not. so they don't. >> and feel like the federal government is not helping them at all unless they're giving $500,000 to a campaign they're
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not getting any real help there. and-- >> unless a green company. >> it doesn't make sense for the employers, having to look at their employees and say, you know what, if i cover you, then i may not be able to survive. that's tough because the small businesses are run like families. >> home depot, if you ever walk into a home depot you see a group of contractors and they're getting supplies, and you might have companies who are there buying supplies for their work, 40, 50, 60 employees, building houseses and it affects those small businesses that home depot works with, and you know the contractor conditioning of home depot you don't want to park there, and they're doing serious work and you're there to fix a door handle, but they're doing serious work and may have to layoff people. >> tucker: and many companies applied for and received
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exemptions, so many applied for exemptions, they stopped releasing the list of companies who don't have to abide by the new news. >> and starting with mcdonald's and down the list. and do you know a small business that is affected? >> and things getting out of control at gitmo. guards forced to fire rubber pellets in a clash involving detainees who are currently on a hunger strike. occurring after a commander decided to remove a terror suspect from a communal cell to a single sell. we're told they had been covering up security cameras to protest the confinement. prior to the incident the detainees had access to satellite tv and recreational facilities, folks. and no one was seriously hurt. a former justice of the peace will soon be charged with the
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murders of two texas prosecutors and one of their wives. eric williams was arrested for making terroristic held on 3 million dollars bond. yesterday, fbi agents spent hours searching three storage units in connection with the about murder and agents searched for evidence from his home and the homes of his in-laws. >> my god, they took a bunch of stuff out of there. of course, it was all in the plastic containers. >> williams has not been formally named a suspect in the murders of mike and cynthia mcclelland and mark ha has hasse. >> a pack being company is taking back 468,000 roast beef, ham, turkey and pork from 13 states and worried the
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meat may be contaminated with a bacteria called listeria. so far no illnesses. after strokes from an illegal drop, he had 70, and shocking claim of ex-husband from tiger's girlfriend von. he tweeted no problem, masters tournament asked me to call in and help. you have to keep an eye on those cheaters. and we assume he's not swut-- >> and terrorists, kill them with drone strike? does that help our nation or
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are they dying with the information. the man with the story is next. >> and gabrielle reese, her comments, women should submissive. ♪ that's why there's ocuvite to help replenish key eye nutrients. ocuvite has a unique formula not found in your multivitamin to help protect your eye health. ocuvite. help protect your eye health.
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[ motorcycle revving ] getting you back on a brand-new bike. now, that's progressive. >> welcome back. republicans like john mccain. staunch supporters of the u.s. military by settling international dispute. recently other republicans emerged. rand paul. >> i asked how can you kill someone without going to a judge or a jury, are we going to give up our rights to politicians, to any politician of any stripe? are we going to give up the right to decide who lives and
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who dies? >> and it not only goes against what most republicans believe, but it goes against the white house, too. >> clayton: it seems to be popular for our national security. and the commander of the u.s.s. cole, attacked, and thank you for being on the show. >> thank you for having me on. >> clayton: john mccain called him a whacko after he held up hague al's nomination. there seems to be a rift, do you come down on the side of rand paul or john mccain. >> and he asked the question, why are we killing these people and can that exist for overseas and terrorists actually come to the united states. the fact that the administration waffled and would not give a clear answer gives pause to americans to ask why couldn't it happen here? >> and commander, aren't you also saying that the president
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really has made a mistake by targeting terrorists and killing them rather than capturing them and getting some intel from them? >> i wouldn't say it's a mistake. what he's done is taken it too far. i know that the administration from the beginning was opposed to guantanamo bay. despite the fact that american taxpayers have invested over 300 million in the state of the art intelligence facility. killing them may be easy, but sets us up for long-term failure. every terrorist that you kill that could possess intelligence information should be exploited to find out how they're operating and not in the future. >> speak of guantanamo bay, drama there unfolding, common areas which is news to me where terrorists could be held and get together and play cards and freedom to put rags and t-shirts and stuff over the cameras there so you can't see what they're doing. guards had to bust in there and break up what appeared to
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be these individuals creating weapons and attacking guards. what do you make in what's going to happen and the freedom to congregate. >> i think you have to be reasonable. if you've got detainees willing to cooperate with us, to share intelligence and open up, give us some description of what they're doing. you want to find a method of reward and doing that in camp 6 by allowing them to have the communal prayer and talk together and do things together. obviously as the hunger strike began to grow, the concern of the camp commander is if we continue to allow this to happen, the influence is going to continue to grow and it has to be stopped. the fact that they started covering cameras and interfering with camp 6 and the detainee operations had to be stopped and they decided to react with homemade weapons, they brought it on themselves. negotiation is not a tactic you use with terrorists and they went in there and gave
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them more than ample opportunity and you have to make sure you keep discipline going in the camp. >> all right, colonel, thank you for your time and your book just came out in paper book just came out in paper back. >> clayton: a plane in bali crashed into a lake, we'll show you how the passengers escaped alive. >>' when it pours. no, when it rains, you get poor. the rain tax that's making quite a splash in one state. ♪ i want to know have you ever seen the rain ♪ ♪ i want to know have you ever seen the rain ♪ there's a reason no one says
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>> well, there you are. 6:22 is the time this sunday morning and some quick headlines, now you he see it, now you don't. >> and an apartment building in portugal demolished in seconds. 8,000 tons of concrete cleared to make room for a luxury condominium. paying your respect literally. those visiting the 9/11 memorial will have a fee. reservations made in advance, online or by phone. >> thank you. well, maryland taxpayers are about to be singing a new tune, rain, rain, go away before government makes us pay.
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>> clayton: it's part of a rain tax for home owners and businesses, any roof, driveway or patio, anything that prevents the rain from reaching the ground. >> dan, nice to see you this morning thanks for having me, guys. >> explain this for me. rain hits your roof and the government could tax you if it doesn't soak through the ground? how can they do this? >> we're laughing because it seems like a story on "the onion" not a major news channel. governor o'mally, running for president quietly has run out a noncreative way to tax and this is the new creative way. they're going to tax the surface area of your property, that's quote, inpervious it's going to put them out of
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business. >> it's basically a tax on civilization itself of any man made structure or object. and it's regressie. if i live in a house that takes us most of the lot, ill he' pay a large he proportion than my wealthy neighbor who has a massive green space in his yard. >> i was talking to a business owner about a different topic, but he has a machine shop with a large, flat roof, football field size type. he said to me that the impact of this is going to be the tens of thousands of dollars and he cannot. the rules of economics apply no matter what, he cannot sell his wears at a competitive price. if this tax had to be built into his product. where are the tax and spend liberal crowd going to realize there are results, middle class votes and businesses
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that are going to lose their jobs. people are going to be hurt by this but they don't realize this. >> if a business has to retrofit the roof or walkways, 70, 80, $100,000, where does that money come from. >> you live in that area and you know the health of the chesapeake bay and provides for the wellness the area of course. here is what the epa says, it will help to clean rivers and other water ways that support the local economy, fishing, swimming and drinking water sources. if the areas are damaged as a result of this change you won't have the tourism and other things, what do you say to that. >> they said that last time when they implemented a flush tax in maryland. it's exactly what i said a flush tax, if that's what you're thinking, that's what we're taxed on. not only didn't they say it would clean up the bay, they tripled it. at what point do we stop
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having the red herring argument. and all we hear from the administration are roads and bridges and, but in the real world businesses ultimately have to say what went wrong, not how do we hammer businesses because we couldn't figure it out. >> tucker: the truth is if you're worried about water quality in the bay, you would land on agriculturalists, but they have an effective lobby. i wonder if the governor maryland looks at virginia and see it's growing, why is maryland stagnant white virginia grows. >> virginia and delaware love us. the joke in married, they call it flow taxes, the businesses flow to virginia and delaware. and you know, we've lost 30,000 people, thousands of businesses closing shop that
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can't possibly compete in a space where built into the price is a tax on business, it's only passed on to the end consumer. so folks are leaving. we just had a gun company that's getting ready to pull up and leave as well. >> that's maryland's new slogan, maryland, great for virginia. >> and north carolina and south carolina. dan, thanks for joining us. >> clayton: coming up on the show, volleyball star gabrielle reece taking heat for her new book, saying the key to a successful relationship is being submissive. >> mr.? >> bond, james bond. >> why the line that made 007 famous almost never happened. arigato!
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>> ♪ friday night and the lights are low ♪ ♪ looking out for a place to go ♪ >> really?
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she's working it. >> clayton: my late '70s play list. a british woman busting a move and stops while someone walks by, but gets the beat going again and the music provided by us. he we don't know what she's dancing to. >> anna: an internal sound track. >> tucker: and she's got it in her head and she didn't have any ear phones. >> clayton: that's organic. >> anna: and this happened to me last week, and i was walking my dog, it wasn't dancing, it was singing and a guy walks by, i can't hear him. music is up so loud. he goes that's a great song. what was i singing? >> stand by me. >> anna: not necessarily the safest song to sing. >> clayton: do you dance in
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hidden places? >> i danced in public one time and never will-- >> on youtube. >> clayton: my wife asked would you ever dance in public? no, absolutely not. in my room, my office once in a while, but hopefully never any videotape of that, you don't want it, trust me. >> tucker: gabrielle reece, married to laird hamilton, the surfer. says that being feminine means being submissive to your husband. >> clayton: we need to go back to simpler times and her foot is too big for the glass slipper, being feminine means being soft, receptive and submissive and this set off a firestorm. she took to twitter, i want to be clear about this. >> anna: i would like to be clear submissive in the sense of service not i do the same
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job of a man and don't expect to get paid equal. it's a fine line in the work place and tough and hate that for women, if you stand up for yourself sometimes people think you're a word that rhymes with a witch and starts with a b. in the sense of family, i agree with her, from the biblical perspective you're right. she's been married for 17 years and almost filed for divorce or starting to go through it after five years in and made some changes and this works for them. >> clayton: we've seen a couple of these books, right. sheryl sandberg, her book that made a lot of headlines called "lean in" we know the description from ursela meyers coming back after a week with her baby. this is the argument that in the home you need to be submissive, soft and receptive
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and the man can be gruff and go about his business and that's the he key. and shes being gruff and tough and it wasn't until she was soft and receptive for it to work. >> tucker: takes a strong woman. who is stronger, a brittle harsh feminist crowing about power or gabrielle reece who is receptive. i've never met a man who doesn't want to please his wife. and looks like gabrielle reece is very smart of the she's not in charge in the house? of course she is. >> clayton: and soft and receptive as southern moms have explain, the key to happy marriage, let the husband think that he's the one-- >> it's the southern thing. >> tucker: the second they tell you they're submissive, you're lost. >> anna: and the man may be
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the head of the household, but the woman is legs. >> clayton: and janice, september and receptive, janice dean. >> i have to be careful, this is my first time with tucker and first time on air and i don't want him to get the wrong impression of me. but who is she married to, that surf guy, right. >> laird hamilton. >> tucker: greatest surfer of all time. >> i'm sure it works the first couple of times and she's got to sell books so there has to be a little bit controversial. >> clayton: who would have known that gabrielle reece had a book. >> and now we're talking about it. and so let's do some submissive weather, shall we? >> that's the spirit. >> take a look at the temperatures, show my some temperatures, come on, map the so submissive. 30 in minneapolis, 39 in chicago, 50 in new york. it's going to warm up today thankfully and rapid city 31,
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31 it's the two winters winter in the north and summer in the south. and flash floods louisiana up to mississippi and low pressure moving in from the gulf of mexico bringing a lot of moisture and then talking about the next storm, pushing into the northern plains and bringing a foot or more of snow, yet again, for some of these areas that were pummelled last week. look at denver, in and around denver, 6, 12, 18 inches and look at bopoor bismark. we're mid april and talking about winter unfortunately. the threat for severe weather, cold air and warm air from the south. and strong winds, could see wind and hail and tornados today across the plains states from oklahoma up to missouri and illinois and it's going to be a four-day event much like
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last week where we saw severe weather pretty much every single day monday through friday and this is sort of the same deal, unfortunately. if you live in these areas, know what you're going to do if you're in a watch or warning. as an example, look at denver. 54 by wednesday, 27. look the at the overnight lows, single digits. a lot of weather to talk about. you'll certainly do that from the fox news extreme weather. back inside to clayton, anna and tucker. >> tucker: thank you, janice dean. great job. secretary of state john kerry just touching down in japan this morning and he's wrapping up a four-day tour of asia focusing on calming the tensions of north korea and rehe leased this propaganda video showing missile attacks. ready to defend against kim
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jong-un. >> the united states has sent ships with missile defense capabilities. the pentagon would think it's easier and chances for destroying a north korean missile. while secretary of state john kerry was in china yesterday, he said he told chinese leaders the u.s. was only deploying the official defensive positions to be as careful as possible. >> the missile defense we discussed absolutely why we have taken the steps we have taken in direct response to the fact that american interests and american territory are threatened in the following way, guam, hawaii, and they brag, your threatened and any president would be irresponsible not to heed warning and at least take precautionary measures. >> secretary kerry said if north korea denuclearizes the need for having a robust
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forward leaning posture of defense would no longer division. secretary kerry was diplomatically trying to get china, a very key north korean ally, to finally punish pyongyang for their aggressive behavior with the hope of convincing the north koreans eventually end their nuclear program, but the chinese haven't given an indication they're going to change a stance with north korea at all and right now secretary kerry is in japan and before we got more detail with the productivity of today's meeting, he thought they were generally constructive and positive and did say that japan are on the same about the peninsula. >> the time now for the rest of your headlines. one person is still missing after a feel. a 60-year-old man was with two other experienced hikers, and
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they both made it out alive. according to one of the climbers, it came on them with no warning whatsoever. said he was carried about a thousand feet. >> one of the men has a shoulder injury. the other a hamstring injury. >> new details this morning about that plane that crash-landed in the water off bali. officials say that the plane involved was brand new and had only been used for two months. the pilot had over 10,000 hours of flying experience and what could have possibly happened? the plane overshot the runway, skidding into shallow water. amazingly all 108 on board survived and dozens were hurt. this'll analyze the black box to figure out how they overshot that runway with all of that experience, tucker. >> tucker: the line that made him famous almost wasn't. >> you're?
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>> bond, james bond. >> tucker: an early draft revealing author ian fleming was to called him james sectent, and thankfully he crossed that out and wrote bond above it. in the first movie 007. >> clayton: one syllable, it's mott menacinmenacing, bond. and the whistleblower, next. >> anna: and this morning, the real life pippy long stocking is in trouble, busted for assault. so free credit score's
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the people of bp made a commitment to the gulf., and every day since, we've worked hard to keep it. today, the beaches and gulf are open for everyone to enjoy. we've shared what we've learned, so we can all produce energy more safely. bp's also committed to america. we support nearly two-hundred-fifty thousand jobs we're working to fuel america for generations to come. our commitment has never been stronger. >> 6:46 is the time now. i'm anna kooiman.
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do you have a long commute? it could be killing you. people who commute 30 minutes or more to work are more likely to die younger-- die younger, rather. researchers are saying here is the reason. because the long trip can cause higher blood pressure and also heart disease and the redheaded star of the 1988 movie "adventures of pippi longstocking" is in trouble with the law. ♪ everybody wonders, 38-year-old tammy aarons for allegedly assaulting her roommate. he called out during the fight causing a neighbor to intervene. >> democrat mccauliffe wants to be the next governor of the commonwealth of virginia and successful business man and troubled surfaced has week after e-mails surfaced
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suggesting that one of mccall's business adventures was nothing, but a covert scheme to sell u.s. visas to foreigners. here to explain what was uncovered, the president of the franklin center f. >> as i understand it, mccauliffe started in car company in virginia, nas with a the plan. >> right. >> was going to employ thousands of virginians. >> right. >> as car companies do and transform the manufacturing base. is that what happened? >> no, the time line is terry had tchd tpurchased the company went to the immigration center, and half million to million in the company and under review by the economic development officials and they had grave concerns. now, terry then said-- >> so the idea was, you investigate invest in the company you get a visa. >> you get on the fast track.
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though you can't sell them. that's heavily advertised to get that visa and move into the united states. after numerous, numerous questions were asked by the virginia department of economic development, terry, and green tech auto did not get back to the state of virginia so he moved it to mississippi. got a 5 million dollar grant with the help of republican governor haley barber and they were going to try to build the company there. it has not been producing the numerous considers, billion dollars worth of investment and employ thousands of people? >> no, they don't. >> tucker: how many jobs have they created? >> that number is incredibly hard to find. we cannot get them to say how many cars they've produced or jobs created. we've seen youtube vehicles of terry mccauliffe, saying maybe 50 jobs, in mississippi, maybe at virginia where the
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headquarters is. you have to create ten jobs within two years and the state of virginia determined they didn't think that mccauliffe's company was that many. >> that was their contention, looking at their business plan and looking at what was coming from those documents, those e-mails, that he they did not think that they would create ten jobs and jim garrity wrote about that. and also the fact that even if they got all of their investors in, they would still be a billion dollars short in capital for the program. >> tucker: a billion dollars short. >> it's redacted, but it's redacted blank billion dollars. it could be at least one billion dollars. >> tucker: i know you'll continue to report on this. thank you, i haven't seen any of these cars on the street. >> i haven't either. thanks, tucker. >> tucker: she called american leaders war criminals during the vietnam war and attacked. should jane fonda be playing
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nancy reagan? and courtney scott has the best american vacation you can afford this summer coming up. ♪ [ phil ] when you have joint pain and stiffness... accomplishing even little things can become major victories. i'm phil mickelson, pro golfer. when i was diagnosed with psoriatic arthritis, my rheumatologist prescribed enbrel for my pain and stiffness, and to help stop joint damage. [ male announcer ] enbrel may lower your ability to fight infections. serious, sometimes fatal events including infections, tuberculosis, lymphoma, other cancers, nervous system and blood disorders, and allergic reactions have occurred. before starting enbrel, your doctor should test you for tuberculosis and discuss whether you've been to a region where certain fungal infections are common. you should not start enbrel if you have an infection like the flu. tell your doct if you're prone to infections, have cuts or sores, have had hepatitis b, have been treated for heart failure, or if you have symptoms such as persistent fever, bruising, bleeding, or palens. nce enbrel helped relieve my joint pain,
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>> looking for a deal on a family vacation, why not be precise in the united states. here with ideas for american adventures is courtney scott, senior editor at travelocity. >> good to see you. >> clayton: and tax day is quickly approaching. trying to go to the united states than somewhere else save some money. >> and the alamo in san
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antonio, texas, 2.5 million people come to remember the al aloe defenders, if you're staying there, stay next door at the manger hotel, it's more like a music. 13 presidents stayed there. many aristocrats and it's $590 for a flight and four night package. >> and the tour of the alamo included? >> the alamo is free. >> clayton: that's great. unless the sequester got it. lewis and clark, gateway to the west in st. louis, missouri, the staging grounds for the louise and clark expe dags. >> in 1804, thomas jefferson sent them to explore and beyond. and coining the term gateway of the west. if you're staying there, westin hotel built in one of eight original warehouses and continues the history theme close to the gateway arch, the symbol of the great american
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explorers, 584 for a flight and four nights. >> clayton: and you also talk about st. augustine, america's oldest city. >> america's oldest city. >> clayton: lots of pirate history in st. augustine, and a beautiful city. >> quaint and charm, 1665, and check out the castillo, the la fiesta inn and suite on the motion. >> a promo code. tell people about it. >> $25 in addition to these discounts off. starting tomorrow to use the code tax day 25 on travelocity.com. >> clayton: courtney scott, great to see you. >> great to see you. >> clayton: she called americans war criminals, and should jane fonda be allowed
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to play nancy reagan in a movie? we're back with more on that. mine was earned in djibouti, africa, 2004. the battle of bataan, 1942. [ all ] fort benning, georgia, in 1999. [ male announcer ] usaa auto insurance is often handed down from generation to generation because it offers a superior level of protection and because usaa's commitment to serve the military, veterans, and their families is without equal. begin your legacy. get an auto-insurance quote. usaa. we know what it means to serve.
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the act of soaring across an ocean in a three-hundred-ton rocket doesn't raise as much as an eyebrow for these veterans of the sky. however, seeing this little beauty over international waters is enough to bring a traveler to tears. we're putting the wonder back into air travel, one innovation at a time. the new american is arriving.
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>> hey there, how are you feeling? seven o'clock now, i'm anna kooiman and sunday, the 14th of april. remember when the president said this? >> no family making less than $250,000 a year will see any form of tax increase. >> anna: well, that's proving to be false. we have all the new taxes that are going to be kicking you in the wallet this year. >> tucker: and then terror suspects out for revenge. gitmo detainees use makeshift weapons to attack guards at guantanamo bay. the latest on a guilty confrontation at the u.s. camp in cuba. she's insulting american soldiers yet again. hanoi jane fonda calling out our troops and this hour, we have a vet who is firing back and created a facebook page with a lot of support. "fox & friends" hour two
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starts right now. ♪ >> get the taxes done, guys. >> tucker: it's going to take a lot more than. tomorrow is april 15th, ladies and gentlemen. 7 a.m. on the east coast, hate to wake you up with the bad knew, 24 hours to pay up. >> anna: every year, i saw i'm going to do it early and file early and got the stuff to my accountant last night. >> clayton: and the loopholes and all the things we were now being taxed and they add so many new pieces of information to the tax code every year and we talk about simplification of the tax code, not going to happen. >> tucker: it's more progressive and an ever expanded portion of the federal budget. for years that's not the way it was supposed to be. obama going back to the 2008 campaign was very clear about
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this. he said look, i'm going to tax rich people, he did make that pledge and i'm not going to tax anybody who is not. and he set the threshold clearly, remember this. watch. >> no family, making less than $250,000 a year, will see any form of tax increase. >> if you make less than $250,000 a year and both making $250,000 a year less, would not see their taxes go up one single dime. >> and balance our budget on the backs of the middle class families. >> the truth is, what we're hearing from the g.o.p. in the weekly address, they're criticizing the president saying virtually, mr. president, under your plan, every single american, almost, would see tax increases, including the middle class and that a trillion dollars this new taxes is coming at us. >> tucker: that happened january 1st, payroll taxes went up, we paid when -- every
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epa or federal regulation a tax on the entire country and tobacco, if every smoker in america quit smoking tomorrow, it would go bankrupt. >> clayton: go hide your wallet, to tucker's point, the cigarette tax is going up nearly a dollar, 94 cents. the tobacco tax hike. >> anna: next up, no free lunch. the tax on an employer is -- they're provided meals, anyway, also going up. let's take a look at that one. >> clayton: this is ridiculous, google, one of the incentives in it it, working at yahoo! at facebook, they're there all day and food stationed around and ever been to google headquarters, they've got the foods set up
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and never without 15 feet of foote food this that place. >> anna: we have definitely inexpensive prices for healthy options and because of, you know, rates on insurance costs for companies, if they have wellness programs in place, you know, there are often healthy options they could end up back firing and causing more issues for businesses to be spending money on health issues for their employees. >> tucker: and then in the state of maryland, in reaction to new epa federal regulations, there is a rain tax. if you own any structure, man made structure and impedes the progress of rain, you're getting taxed. the bottom line message frome cn tax, government is unenemy, doing what it can to soak you. it sees you as a mark, as a source of funds. it is a tick attached to the
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body. >> clayton: a deer particular sucking the life, giving you lyme disease. >> tucker: isn't that supposed to be prosperity and-- no. >> clayton: we talked about maryland and the rain tax. if you're a small business and you've now got to retrofit the roof and the water seeps off so it doesn't soak through. and spend $100,000 to retrofit your business. >> the point is red light cameras and point of speed cameras and the point of the lottery. and that's the whole point of virtually everything government does to soak more money out of you. >> and gas taxes, everyone has to drive and get on the freeway. and there is he' no choice unless you're taking public transportation, by the way, on that. and higher gas taxes across the country. if you look the at the national average right now. $3.53, so, these are the states that have entacted or are considering enacting these
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gas tax hikes across your screen right there. >> and moving right along for you on this sunday morning, we're going to he get right to your headlines and you're looking at live pictures, about to, of secretary of state john kerry meeting with japanese leaders. and they hope to gain support to denuclearizing, and coming off a meeting with china yesterday and chowing suppor-- vowing support. and a former justice of the peace will soon be charged with the murders of two texas prosecutors and one of their wives. he's held on 3 million dollars bond. they collected evidence from williams' home and home of his in-la in-laws. >> my god, they took, they took a bunch of stuff out of there and of course, it was
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all in plastic containers. >> anna: williams has not been formally named a suspect in the murders of mike and cynthia mclelland and mark hasse, but he has been questioned several times. seven minutes after the hour. a louisiana based meat company expanding a recall over fears that more meat may have contaminated and taking back 468,000 pounds of roast beef, ham, turkey and pork, from 13 steaks. and they're worried the meat may be contaminated with meat that could produce fevers and muscle aches so far, no illnesses have been reported. rutgers university set to name a basketball coach and will announce the hiring of los angeles lakers assistant eddie jordan sometime this week. weeks after rutgers fired mike rice over the video, the one
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you're seeing for verbally and physically abusing players at practice. and jordan played for rutgers final four that year and assistant coach at the school in the 1980's. those are your headlines sunday morning. >> clayton: let's head down to guantanamo bay this morning, and a source of controversy yet again. yesterday if you were out enjoying a sunny afternoon you might not have known what was going on on guantanamo bay. quite a scuffle unfolded as guards had to bust into a common area where a lot of the so-called terrorists are able to hang out and congregate. they get to play cards, four square, perhaps bridge, and make their own weapons, apparently. that's what was happening, yesterday. they had pieces of whatever, and creating their homemade weapons. then decided to put tarps and shirts and things over the security cameras and that's when guards busted in to break it up. >> tucker: i think you may
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have it wrong. i thought guantanamo bay was closed? wasn't this the first promise of the obama campaign? >> the very first. >> tucker: i hope the aclu is on this, talk about taking advantage of the basic decency of america, these are people apparently who were plotting to kill us and the u.s. government's kind of gone out of its way to be humane i would say. in fact, these are prisoners experiencing the most liberal of all policies of guantanamo bay and look what happened. >> as part of this agreement and with the red cross to be able to come into an area and say, look, we might be able to get more information out of these individuals if we'rer to them. and they're allowed to pray together. we talked to a commander earlier on the show. it's gone too far. >> if you've got detainees willing to cooperate with us, share intelligence, open up, give us a description of what they're doing. you want to find a method of reward and doing that camp 6, the fact that they started
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covering cameras and interfering with the operation of camp 6 and detainee operatings down there in whole had to be stopped. and the fact that they decided to react violently with homemade weapons, they brought this on themselves. let's not forget, negotiation is not a tactic that you use with terrorists. >> anna: we were lucky this time. there weren't any serious injuries or anything that happened what we've heard about that's been reported, but, i mean, these behaviors cannot be tolerated. >> clayton: right, we're led to believe that we give them kinder conditions they'll be somehow more forth coming with information. perhaps, but we don't see it in this where they're making homemade weapons to attack the guards. let us know, on twitter eter ff weekend. >> tucker: the president is making it clear, taxing and
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spending and that the way for had your economy. and advisor to president reagan, his take coming up. >> anna: driving in the left lane, and what makes you think twice. >> clayton: and driving slow in those lanes. who's with me. ♪ don't rush me ♪ [ engine sputters ] [ dennis ] allstate wants everyone to be protected on the road. whether you're an allstate customer or not. all you have to do is call. [ female announcer ] call and sign up for good hands roadside assistance today. [ dennis ] are you in good hands? for good hands roadside assistance today. theengineered with aeel-drive unique drive system and dual transmission. all-wheel traction.
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>> welcome back, well, the 1960's and '70s, jane fonda was best known for her vocal opposition to the vietnam war.
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is she the best person to play nancy reagan in a movie partially about her life? >> he launched massive campaign to keep fonda from playing that role. thank you for being with us. >> thank you. >> anna: now, your brother died in vietnam and you say that hearing the response from jane fonda as people are creating all of this hoopla is not very remorseful. i want to make sure our viewers get a take of jane fonda. >> clayton: here is what she said in response to what the veterans said about her playing nancy reagan in this upcoming movie. she said get a life. and if she creates hoopla, it causes more people to of see the movie and it would tweak the right, get a leave, and for opposing her in the movie. she says she's apologized numerous times.
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>> all right. well, first, i don't want to say it's my brother, it was my brother-in-law that died in vietnam, was killed. and i want to send out recognition american legion post 581. and this is a typical response by jane fonda and shows she doesn't have any remorse. it's actually opened this up. i had no idea that my page was going to be as big as it is, and it's funny, because people are telling me, larry, you're famous now. i don't want to be famous. i want her to be infamous for what she did. >> speaking of your page, we didn't mention that you created this facebook page called boycott hanoi jane playing nancy reagan and i have it up on my ipad, 12, 955 likes that's grown tremendously. what's been the response from the veterans community and
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those currently serving to your boycott? >> well, about three weeks ago, i probably had 400 likes on it. and once i gave an interview, it blew up. and it blew up something to where i couldn't imagine. i've gotten called by my uncle and now the elks and the american legion and the vfw, they're calling and sthey're saying it's no longer a boycott, it's a movement the they had no clue with jane fonda not about for giving and forgetting, but now younger he people are coming up to me and going, i had no idea that was jane fonda, the actress, the movie star person being a traitor. and they look at me and they're like, wow, my son, i showed him he's ten years old and showed him some pictures
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and he was like, dad, she was defense ameri against america, yeah, she was. >> anna: and jane fonda is saying i've apologized for this, over 16 years from what i'm reading here, but what do you think that film makes should be doing now in response to this outcry from americans? >> well, you know, the thing about this is that especially her playing nancy reagan, she could be in another kind of movie, i would still boycott, and not watch it, but it drew the line when she was playing nancy reagan. really? playing a patriotic president's wife is just, it was just too much for me. and i wanted to see if americans felt the same way, and they do. >> clayton: all right, website, boycott hanoi jane playing nancy reagan.
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a google search, the first that pops up. 12,000 likes, certainly started something, larry. >> i hope to keep it going. if anyone it's educated the younger generation who jane fonda is and i'm glad this happened. >> clayton: larry, thanks for waking up with us this morning, we appreciate your time this morning. >> anna: 19 minutes after the hour. the president is making his priorities clear, taxing and spending. is that the answer to fixing our economy? a former economic advisor to president reagan with his take. >> clayton: want to pay tribute to the 9/11 memorial. from now on you'll have to pay to get in. is that fair? hoo-hoo.
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hoo-hoo...hoo-hoo. hoo-hoo hoo. sir... i'll get it together i promise... heeheehee. jimmy: ronny, how happy are folks who save hundreds of dollars switching to geico? ronny:i'd say happier than the pillsbury doughboy on his way to a baking convention. get happy. get geico. fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more.
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>> 7:22 now. $2 to see the 9/11 memorial and they're made in advance, online or over the phone. next, $500. that's how much cash a montana man's dog ate when he was left alone in the car. my goodness and now the man sent the pieces of five $100 bills to the treasury in hopes of getting his money back. who has $500 in the car. 73 million dollars is how much the high speed rail system will cost them a year, and ridership, slowe ridership-- making it a big financial loser. >> tucker: thanks. and president obama says the top priority, if we follow the
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budget, debt with double by 2014, the debt, that is, 78% of the u.s. economy. is that a fix or just obama's plan? joining me now a former advisor to ronald reagan, art laffer, thanks for coming on. >> thank you, tucker. >> tucker: and this is a departure, a compromise, obama meeting in the middle here, doesn't sound like it's true. >> it's not. we know how to fix the economy and what obama is proposing is the same old same old from before, raising taxes on the rich and all of this doesn't make sense. budgets literally work on the ground floor with people. economics is all about incentives, tucker, if you tax people who work and you pay people who don't work, you're going to get a lot more people not working and this long recession recovery has just destroyed enormous numbers of lives in this country and it's
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very sad that he's just pushing the problems on until he's out of office. >> so it's been five years of this economic program, and the economy is stagnant. this new budget proposes spending in federal dollars, just federal not including state or local. about $12,000 per american, man, woman and child. it's a lot. >> it's terrifying, it's terrifying. >> tucker: so the idea is, i guess, that by continuing to do the same thing we'll get a different result at a certain point? >> that's exactly what they believe. if you look at obamacare, take that, for example, if you give people stuff free, it's going to overconsume. if i'm able to be in a smorgasbord where i get the food free, i'm going to overeat and go right to the caviar until i get sick. >> tucker: i've done that. >> i have, too. the programs never work and
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they never work, and we're going to have to wait to crash to come out of it. we know how to fix the economy and do it straight forward. low rate, flat tax, spending restraint. and free trade, and minimal regulations and get the heck out of the way and let people solve their own problems. government-- yeah. >> tucker: quickly, i know it's hard to discern motives, but what you said about obamacare strikes me as true, if you eliminate cost considerations the costs will go up and yet, obamacare was sold publicly as a way to contain health care costs. do you believe that the people who sold it to the public believed it would actually reduce cost? >> i don't think they would consider it. like most people in washington have a desire to have people and attracts people to washington d.c. and that's what they're after and obamacare did consolidate power in the government and i think theys were disinterested whether it would help to be honest.
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we'd love everyone to see health care, but you don't get paid for doing something, it's not much in your interest to supply it now, is it? >> nothing is for-- >> and not to lie about it. >> exactly. that's the correct. >> i loved your tax segment earlier. >> tucker: thanks so much. great to see you this morning. >> thank you. >> tucker: still to come, more schools testing teens for drugs and alcohol. is that a good idea? is the parents' role. and ticketed for driving in the left lane, should cops ticket slow pokes, should be in the right lanes, might have you thinking before hitting the road and going slow. ♪
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>> what's cuter than a newborn baby taking a nap? a newborn baby taking a nap with bull dog puppies. and this is going viral. >> that child will never be
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sick. once you're innoculated with dog saliva, i'm not kidding, it's like a pole he yo shot, you're never sick again. your immune system. >> clayton: and my sister's is like a zoo, and we go over with hayfever and coughing, and her kids are fine. >> tucker: if you're concerned with your children's health, introduce them to dogs at a young age. >> anna: and thing they're tuckered out. i wouldn't be feeling comfortable having a little puppy with puppy sharp teeth, i know when mine was a baby, bite, bite,bite. >> clayton: puppies run around nonstop and knocked them out for a while. and yesterday, we told you breathlizers at the prom and now more and more schools are implementing more testing for athletics and drug testing for middle school students, is
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this a necessary evil or being taken too far or the job of parents? >> the schooling portion of it. if they're implementing it to get in the door at the school. that's where the taxpayers dollars are going to the school and it falls on the parents, for that behavior. do drugs, kicked out of school, and that's on the parents. why should the school be put on the breathlizers and walk the line test and all the things they're doing, to play a sport is a privilege, to go to the prom is a privilege, it's extracurricular. >> anna: and it's very different there. and you think about if the high schoolers are having to do this to get into the prom, it creates an expectation and the people who are behind this, are thinking there will be a good trickle down and an impact on the middle schoolers and also, it's great for peer pressure pushback in a lot of
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ways. i mean, if your child doesn't want to drink and all of their friends are going come on, man, come on, high five they could say i don't want to get busted going into prom and they have the right to choose that thing. >> tucker: and fathered a lot of children, i understand that completely. there are a lot of bad things going on out there. and people are concerned about drugs out there. and this is the easy way out. parents don't want to say to the children, you can't smoke pot, i'm going to drug test you. the easy way is to put it on the school, but do you want to empower the government to drug test your kids? i don't think you want that. >> clayton: if your child is caught doing this it's on the parents. they get expelled from that school, but the argument that this hurts society. when you have a child that a child is expelled from school, then shoulder the burden, taxpayers footing the bill for
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the kid to go to another school. >> that's the problem with socialism, makes the government responsible for everything. >> if you had a parent who lost a child in an accident on prom night, let us know. >> e-mail us the at friends@foxnews.com as well. >> anna: and headlines, stunning new details about the plane crash that landed in the water off bali. the plane involved was brand new and only in use for two months and the pilots had over 10,000 hours of flying experience. the plane overshot the runway yesterday skidding into shallow water. amazingly all 108 people on board survived, but dozens were hurt. investigators will interview the pilot to analyze the black box and find out exactly what caused the crash. >> a mother outraged after her six-year-old daughter spends six hours alone on the school
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bus. she says she fell asleep on the bus ride to school and didn't wake up until 2:30 in the afternoon. the bus driver says he didn't see the little girl sleeping, and the mother says he would have if he had been doing his job. and. >> check the seats after you drop the kids off at skchool. the girls's mother says she wants to sue the school for child endangerment. and the flags honor the brave men and women who serve our country. but for a marine veteran can't fly them in the front of his restaurant because they violate a new city code. >> please don't try to tell me that my marine corps, air force, navy, coast card, are signs and going to compare them to beer signs?
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you're going to tell me i can't honor them, can't show respect for them? >> and got one on his cowboy hat. and hollywood, florida requires businesses to apply for a permit. and he's fined $300 a day until he takes them down. don't you hate into stuck behind that slow driver in the pass lane? >> yes. well, now, florida lawmakers want to make them move over. >> florida, thank you. >> and they passed a law allowing them to get ticketed if they're driving too slow or passing in the left lane and they said they'll have the traffic headaches and get drivers to pay attention. >> what do you think of the bill, slow left lane drivers be ticketed? e-mail us. >> i'll save you the e-mail. yes, the answer is. >> tucker: it might be helpful to restate the rules, not legally, but moral, if you're in the left lane, and dopt
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mart how fastest' going, one mile an hour faster than you, move over and let him pass. >> clayton: you shouldn't be concerned. he's going to get a ticket. >> tucker: totally his business, you are not a cop. >> clayton: let the cops deal with it and we need to-- janice, i want to bring janice in on that. when you do the driving test they don't mention this, this is never in the driving test and we need a refresher course. it's been a long, long time. and where on earth are you driving that fast in new york city? there is no such things in the fast lane, you're driving, 10, 20 miles per hour, there's construction, everyone is slow, but i do think it's a good idea. >> clayton: we need a refresher course, the left lane is for those who want to pass. >> tucker: for people who have something to do and the others are in the lane. >> clayton:-- >> i think we see one of the biggest problems.
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and let's look at the weather map and a lot of folks should have chains on their tires still because we're talking about winter across the northern tier of the country and point out the low pressure center across the gulf coast bringing plenty of rain across mississippi and alabama. they ultimately need the rain and it's too much of a good thing and dealing with flooding. winter storm warnings, and the rockies and ice storms for parts of south dakota. and the threat for severe weather today is going to continue from sunday through monday, tuesday, and wednesday, and sort of the same pattern like we saw last week, so, we could see another severe weather outbreak this week. let's take a look at your satellite radar over the next 24 to 48 hours and see the system moving in, potentials for not only strong storms, but snow from 12 to 18 inches of snow, across colorado up towards the northern rockies and the upper midwest, i think they're done and ready for spring. let's take a look at your
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highs today. again, you can see it's cold enough for snow. 84 in dallas, 89 in san antonio, warming up to a nice 57 in new york today. a quick look at the golf tournament today. the last day for the masters and potential for showers later on in the afternoon today. and then, monday and tuesday and i believe that today is the last day and watching yesterday, with a penalty and the tiger woods thing makes me realize i will never ever ever understand golf ever. >> that's in your wheel house, the forecast, that could have a big impact on the game. there there are showers, people would have to wait until tomorrow for the masters and work and a letdown. >> hopefully there's no more penalties. someone tried to explain it to me and it was like charlie brown's teacher, wa wa wa. >> tucker: like a touchdown.
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>> back to you inside. >> clayton: the world of texting and e-mailing social media has our privacy out the window. where your data is going and what the government intends to do with it. >> anna: millionaire pop star justin bieber's new project. teaching kids how to spend. you've got to hear it to believe it. ♪ that's the way i like it, uh-huh, uh-huh ♪ ♪ that's the way i like it, uh-huh, uh-huh ♪ ♪ that's the way i like it uh-huh, uh-huh ♪ she's everything to you. but your erectile dysfunction - that could be a question of blood flow. cialis tadalafil for daily use helps you be ready anytime the moment's right. you can be more confident in your ability to be ready. and the same cialis is the only daily ed tablet approved to treat ed and symptoms of bph, like needing to go frequently or urgently. tell your doctor about all your medical conditions and medications, and ask if your heart is healthy enough for sexual activity. do not take cialis if you take nitrates for chest pain,
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ambassador for a debit card for adults and the pop star says he wants it teach teenagers spending habits. 3.75 million dollars to represent the company. >> clayton: thanks, anna. with e-mail and texting ruling our modern day lives. more americans are throwing the privacy out the window and the government is watching everything you do it. and a special broadcast "your secret's out", and john roberts. nice to see you this morning. >> good morning, clayton, how are you. >> clayton: i'm doing well. i'm thinking most of the americans are not aware of a lot of the things you uncovered in the special, the mysterious spy center or data center the government is in the process of building. what does it do and should we be concerned about it? >> we're not exactly sure what
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it's going to do, but we know it's a massive facility south of salt lake city, utah, in bluffdale and hold as much data as basically the rest of the computers in the world combined and then some. it's supposed to mold 5 zeta bites and it could reach up to the moon and do that five times and wondering, with the government's ability to suck in all of this data and analyze it, just how much of what we do every day jn line is being recorded? how big is our digital trail? i had a fella named frank ahern visit me in atlanta, a skip tracer. he'd follow people who tried to skip town, credit card data. ap how he hopes people disappear from the data on the
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internet and find it go increasingly difficult task. >> i'm going to send an e-mail to a lawn service company. ahern says that detailed information is something investigators never had. according to the chip maker intel, we send 204 e-mails every minute. the information about us contained in them is nearly limitless, says ahern. and you'd get phone records and say frank called, you know ted whatever hour. they didn't know the conversation twen frank and ted. with e-mails, frank e-mailed ted and this is what he wrote. if you delight things from your account do you-- >> the only delete button is on the laptop, there's no delete button on the internet. >> the internet is forever? >> the internet is forever. we're living in the era called big data. the concern, will that be big brother, is the government watching everything we do. certainly we know the political campaigns are and show you tonight how in 2012
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president obama's campaign used all of those little digital trails at that we leave each and every day online and target voters and help him win the election. >> and i hear from shock from viewers on a regular basis, when i talk about this, i don't think we have an expectation of privacy anymore, if you're out there on the internet, you're out there. you should expect to be exploited and data pulled from your accounts and mined and advertising shot to you. do you find in reporting on this, john, that's the case or not? >> what we're finding, you would expect with people now becoming aware of the idea every time we go online and do something, you wonder why the ads pop up for something you looked at online because they're collecting data on you unless you erase all of that on searches. you would expect that people would become more concern about our privacy, that's one of our big egest things.
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and more and more people are giving it away. how do you explain with an anthony weiner did by posting that photo. and ruining their lives. we visited a 6th grade classroom in middle of massachusetts found a teacher talking to young people how to protect themselves online and be good digital citizens in this era of big data. here is what we found. >> what do you think are some of the-- what do you think before you put a photo online. >> welcome to william e norris elementary school in south hampton, massachusetts. >> have to be appropriate. >> and he's teaching the 6th grade class not to ruin their lives. >> we call it digital footprints and did it for three years and i noticed my students talking about their lives on facebook and they weren't sure how to navigate through that. >> and what was the concern you had. >> how they were interacting
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with other people. >> but there are all of those mixed messages out there because there are all of the instant celebrities who become rich and famous, make millions of dollars because of some controversies that they created by posting something online. for every kim kardashian out there, and there are thousands of people who end up in a big mess. very fascinating what we found and we'll be watching tonight at 9 p.m. >> tucker: your secret's out. >> clayton: that's right, i'm deleting my facebook page as a result of it. reporting "your secret's out", tonight at 9. thanks, john. still to come, what happened to everyone paying their fair share. the president's tax returns are in. quite a buzz on the headlines this weekend. what do you think about the president's new tax rate? we'll talk about it. and then thinking about buying a home, why more and more americans are getting less for the money and what you can do to avoid it to make that home purchase.
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>> 7:54 is the time now. i'm anna kooiman for alisyn camerota. insurance rates are going down, but that's not good news because the home prices are going up. real estate expert joins us now with more. >> good morning. >> anna: so rates are down and let's first talk about that, why is that? >> rates are down because federal reserve has been buying bonds and artificially
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taminping it dun. >> anna: but home owners are paying morel tiff to income which is surprising with the tight economy folks would be you'll watching every penny. why that? >> it's interesting, because of the mortgage rates, we're looking at and because of the fact we've seen the prices come off 30%, from the housing public peak. because of that we've been seeing record levels of housing affordability. we've been seeing that and it's been an illusion because of the mortgage-- because of the mortgage interest rates so we're actually seeing home prices are higher than their historical averages and look alt t at the 1980's and 1990's, they feel lower because you have the mortgage rates and seems lower. >> anna: with interest rates low, are they going to stay
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that way forever? is now a good time to buy. >> that's a great question, now is a good time to buy, if you have the income and planning on staying at home for a long period of time. and fixed 15-year or 30-year mortgage rates. if you're looking to flip the house and adjustable rate mortgage you should take a step back and take a look at home prices versus incomes in the area because the truth of the matter is you might see home prices down the road come off a little bit. because there's a little bit of a mini bubble in certain markets because we have low inventory levels and the price are kind of high when you look at the larger economic picture. >> thank you for your time today. >> thank you. >> 7:56. next on the rundown on "fox & friends," fox news sunday's host chris wallace weighs in on a video out of north korea showing assimilated attack on america. and the ex of tiger's new
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>> good sunday morning to you. great to be with you here on "fox & friends," i'm anna kooiman, it's the 14th of april, 2013. and the shots fired at gitmo, guards and detainees in a violent clash. . >> tucker: whatever happened to everybody paying his fair share? >> when we talk about everybody paying their fair share, americans who can afford it pay their fair share. >> fair play and shared responsibility, i think that's a fair approach. >> tucker: well, the president's tax returns are in and those who can do math are a little confused. details ahead. >> clayton: a former volleyball star stirring up a
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huge debate about marriage, why gabrielle reece says in order to be a good wife and phenomenfe feminine a wife has to be submissive. "fox & friends" starts hour three. ♪ >> welcome into "fox & friends" on this sunday morning. come on in. i love this, gabrielle reece story, and ed says, my wife has a rule, i'm the head of the home, she's the soul of the home. who says that women aren't in charge. and why does a woman know they're in a charge. >> anna: i love how you say, i'm a woman ear me roar, i'm a
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woman hear me prr. >> tucker: more effective. we're learning more about the president's tax returns. >> clayton: the smart thing to do in washington, i suppose, maybe an old press cycle release on friday afternoon because people won't talk about it, they forget that the news still exists as the weekend unfolds. what are in the obama's tax returns, the the income that the president and his wife made. 600,000, down from last year, he had a book so a little less in the bracket. what is making the headlines is the effective tax rate. >> tucker: the president has spoken the past five years, or his public life talking about fair share, and $608,000 puts him in the top 1% of income. what's the fair share. the president has been clear, the fair share of the top 1% is 30% tax rate. fascinating to see that the
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president is paying a little more than half of that, 18%, here is the president on fair share. >> if everybody is getting a fair shot, everybody has a chance to do better. we can build an economy that gives everybody a fair shot. when we talk about everybody paying a fair share. americans who can afford it should pay their fair shot. >> and i think it's a fair approach. americans who can afford it. >> fair share and shared responsibility. that's what we're about. >> a tax system-- >> are we better off when everybody gets a fair shot? >> the thing that strikes me about this, i went backwards digging through some of the president's tax rates the past years, this was exciting research by the way, i was looking at comments that came out of the obama administration the past years and talking about teachers and
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the president saying that, look, there is no reason i should be paying less taxes than a teacher. >>, but a few years ago, the president was the 25%. and what transpired in the past years, a better accountant? how does a president making what he does plummet to 18%. >> tucker: and tax day is tomorrow, i dare you to pay 18% of your taxes and see how long it takes you to go to jail. >> clayton: if i'm not here this weekend, you'll know what happens when the irs goes aknocking. >> anna: there you go. the president, we did see he did give a lot to charity, but what about giving more in it canses and believes in the federal government and believes that 30% is fair. why doesn't he donate some of his income. >> tucker: because fair share for thee, but not for me. and laws aren't fun if you have to live by them, they're
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fun if they're imposed on other people. and i don't know why the press lets them get away with in? and next time he's fair share, i'm sorry, you're 12% short of a 30% effective tax rate. >> and we'll move with the president's budget and idea of grand bargain. we know part and parcel of his plan is to have higher revenues on the part of the rich, again, a compromise forth coming on the part of republicans who may have to give ground on revenues if they're cutting entitlements. >> tucker: this is leading from behind if there ever was. >> anna: when you mention that it's for everybody else, but not for me. the house is going to be voting tomorrow, for delinquent taxpayers who work for the irs, whether they should be fired and other employees as well. you know who is exempt from that? congress. >> tucker: of course, and
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exempting from gun control. you can't have high capacity magazines, but their body guards get them. you've got to pay 30%, they pay 18. you've got to have the ridiculous government health care and they've got their own version of it. >> clayton: and the obamacare bill, a lot of people say we need exceptions because of the employees we have and the heart of the debate, as company implement obamacare. a ceo of home depot deals with his very large company, moment depot and mentioned a few hours ago na they also deal with a lot of small companies, contractors who come to the contracting door to home depot and you feel guilty getting a key made and they're doing hard work. neve a number of employees that's going to hit by obamacare and he says it's really going to crush business. >> obamacare is going to kill off small businesses, there's he no question about it. if they're thrown out of their medical plans now where
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they're covered in a good medical plan and thrown under the bus, they're going to be destroyed, if they don't stay as full-time employees, but as part-time employees, they're going to be destroyed. they have to understand that the villian is not employer, the villian is the u.s. government. it's happened with the bill that was passed in congress by this administration and subsequent administration, and i'm going to tell you that obamacare is the culprit, is the bullet to the temple. >> anna: when he started home depot there were the same almost of employees and when we hear about the economy he recovering a bit and people are starting to feel a little less pain, tell that to the person who is looking for a job or, you know, multiple part-time jobs, trying to
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piece those together to make ends meet. >> tucker: yeah, because in the end, nothing is free. when the government tells you we're getting free health care, actually, someone is paying for it and that someone is almost always an employer and they respond by hiring fewer employees. if you're wondering why this desession, going on three years now, we may not be in recession, but our recovery a so tepid and weak, it's without precedent in 80 years, why is that? because of people like bernie marcus who are feeling the boot of the government on their neck and not hiring. >> anna: simply to stay afloat. things getting out of control at gitmo, prison guards forcing to fire rubber pellets. and the confrontation after a commander decide today move the terror suspects from communal cell to single cells. they were covering up security cameras and makeshift weapons.
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prior to that they had access to satellite television and round the clock recreational facilities. no one was seriously hurt. a former justice of the peace will soon be charged with the murder of two texas prosecutors and one of their wives. and eric williams was arrested on making terrorist threats. they spent hours searching three storage spaces and searched the home of his in-laws. >> they took, they took a bunch of stuff out of there, and of course, it was all in the plastic containers. >> anna: williams has not been formally named a suspect in the murders of mike and cynthia mclelland and mark hasse, but he's been questioned several times. a deadly new strain of bird
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flu, two new cases in the regions from where the outbreak first began and b beijing as well. live markets have been shut down to stop the spread. c.d.c. has been working on a vaccine for the new china flu. despite a 2 stroke penalty for an illegal drop tiger woods enters the final round of the masters four strokes after the lead. shot a 2 under 70 in his third round a shocking claim this morning from the ex-husband of tiger's girlfriend lindsey vonn. thomas vonn says he's the one who alerted the masters. and no problem, happy to call in and help. you always have to keep an eye on those cheaters. if he was joking-- >> those are he's not joking, the most serious words to leave his lips.
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pay back. >> clayton: and chris wallace on rising rhetoric in north korea and a video showing assimilated attack on america. and plus this-- >> i admire you, mr. -- >> bond, james bond. >> tucker: why the line that made 007 famous almost never happened. details ahead. [ engine sputters ] [ dennis ] allstate wants everyone to be protected on the road. whether you're an allstate customer or not. all you have to do is call. [ female announcer ] call and sign up for good hands roadside assistance today. [ dennis ] are you in good hands?
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>> from the unclassified portion which i believe has not yet been made public, the north currently has nuclear weapons capable of delivery by ballistic missiles, would you agree with that assessment by dia? >> you know, congressman, with the number of caveats you put on the front end of this, i'm not going to -- i can't touch
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that one because i'm not sure now it hasn't been released some of it's classified, some is not classified. >> tucker: that was a he think change between congressman lambborn and dempsey. >> anna: a propaganda video out of north korea showing attacks on american cities and secretary kerry tours asia. how is the administration handling this? >> chris wallace, fox news sunday, he joins us. chris, you're going to tackle this on fox news sunday. what sort of questions will you be asking of your guests to get to the bottom of this. it seems we're getting all kinds of things out of the administration, how strong north korea is? >> yeah, i think it's just a genuine follow-up. it's clear from my reportering it was never meant for this information to be made public,
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this congressman of colorado decided to bring it up in an open hearing and he had apparently checked with the the pentagon that it was unclassified and hadn't been released and there's a difference within the intelligence community that the defense intelligence agency believe the koreans have the capability of putting a nuclear warhead on a missile. but that evening you had pushback from general flapper saying that's not the consensus within the intelligence community. i don't think there's an agenda here, i think different agencies have different assessments. >> anna: do we have anything to worry about from anything that all the experts you've been talking to say? because what we're hearing is that if something happens it could potentially happen today or monday to coincide with kim jong-un's grandfather's birthday although south korea say they haven't seen any movement on the east coast for
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any missiles or anything coming forward us. what are you hearing on this? >> well, the answer is we don't know. nobody knows what they have planned. these are mobile missile launches, all they have to do is raise it up and fire it pretty quickly. i don't think we're under immediate threat and north koreans certainly have shown me capability, technological capability to be able to take a war head put it on a missile and fire a missile and hit a strike thousands of miles away. that would be a huge lead and i don't think there's any indication that they intend to do what would be an act of war. they may well have nuclear bomb test inside their country, an underground test or launch unarmed missiles, they have done that before. it's provocative, but the only real possibility of a shooting war breaking out if they were to attack south korea. they have the capability to do
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that and have a huge army, a huge arsenal of rockets and artillery right on the border, less than an hour away from the south korean capital of seoul. again, i don't think there's any indication to do that. if they got into a war with south korea and by proxy with the u.s. they'd get obliterated, again, you're talking about a very -- we don't know in fact kim jong-un is, i'm not sure i'd be lending him money myself. >> tucker: i'm confused about the politics of this. the white house came out and slightly contradicted the conclusions of the dia. >> i think the genuine, one, disagreement between the intelligence community as we heard from the director of national intelligence. and two while they want to make it a real threat, i don't think they want to blow off the threat and exaggerate it beyond what it really is and i think there's been a clear effort to the administration and to this agree i think
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they've sent mixed signals. a week or so ago, you want to get tough, we spent b-2 bombers and f-22 fighters over the korean peninsula and i think there was a feeling that might be dialing this whole thing up and john kerry, the secretary of state, on his trip to the region has said, you know, if they're willing to pullback, we would be willing to resume talks and some people say that's a bad signal to send, but i don't think at this point we want to rich chet u ratchet up, i think we want to-- >> on the show we've got immigration reform, a budget to deal with, a whole slew of issues, and marco rubio and cornyn are joining you this morning. >> and the big story, marco rubio, unveil, and explain, a preview of the comprehensive preview the that the gang of 8
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has come up with. and a hearing in the senate judiciary committee, the big first step, a push going on for months now with this gang of eight on comprehensive immigration reform. >> tucker: that show will be watched carefully by everyone on the hill. >> anna: watch every week. love the show. are american schools testing too much? lawmakers in one state say yes and they want to cut back more than half. is that a good idea or are we setting our kids up to fail? >> putting off paying your taxes because you have a big bill from the irs? the government is now offering payment options. details on that next. ♪ i'm phyllis, and i have diabetic nerve pain.
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when i first felt the diabetic nerve pain, of course, i had no idea what it was. i felt like my feet were going to sleep. it progressed from there to burning like i was walking on hot coals to like a thousand bees that were just stinging my feet. i have a great relationship with my doctor.
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he found lyrica for me. [ female announcer ] it's known that diabetes damages nerves. lyrica is fda approved to treat diabetic nerve pain. lyrica is not for everyone. it may cause seris allergic reactions or suicidal thoughts or actions. tell yo doctor right away if you havehese, new or worsening depression, or unusuhanges in mood or behavior. or swelling, trouble breathing, rash, hives, blisters, changes in eye sit including blurry vision, muscle pain with fever, tired feeling, or skin sores from diabetes. common side effects are dizziness, sleepiness, weight gain, and swelling ofhands, legs, and feet. don't drink alcohol while taking lyrica. don't drive or use machinery until you know how lyrica affects you. ose who've had a drug or alcohol problem may be more likely to misuse lyrica. having les pain... it's a wonderful feeling. [ female announcer ] ask your doctor about lyrica today. it's specific treatment for diabetic nerve pain. to hear more of phyllis's story, visit lyrica.com.
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>> out here live in the dark dungeon. fox news. quick headlines for you. now you see it, now you don't. and apartment building in portugal demolished in a matter of seconds. the pile of rubble was 13 stories high and 54 flats, those are apartments, right. 8,000 tons of concrete cleared to make room for a luxury condominium. if you finished your taxes and you owe the feds money, the irs is offering a few ways to pay up. first, you can pay with a credit card, that sounds like a great idea. three companies are mataking payments and it comes with fees and make installment payments and set aside the monthly amount you like.
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do you want to do layaway, also? >> koi don't think you want to try. should standardized texts be refused? some texas lawmakers say yes, and close to passing a bill. the number plummeting from 15 to 5 and required years of science and math education as well. a good idea or normal lowering of standards. joining us is the texas commissioner of education. thanks for joining us. if this need-- is this needed or lowering standards? >> there's -- over the last decade enough saying there's a body of thoughts we want youngsters to be able to develop in math and science and english and arts and
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social studies. unfortunately it looks like it's indeed-- >> it's ironic considering the amount of noise one hears about americans lagging test scores in science and math and the need to beef them up, according to arne duncan, for example, now is not the time to be lowering. >> not at all. we've seen the texas students over the last decade and a half, because the state raised the level of expectations for our youngsters, we've seen our high school graduation rate increase. we've seen the number of youngsters taking ap exams increase particularly among poor and minority students all because we raise the rigor and expectations. >> tucker: so you raised expectations and people meet them. there are thoughtful people, i will say i met them. who aren't crazy and not necessarily for lower
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standards. but aren't for standardized testing and i want to show meese protesting. >> my wife is a school teacher and she can't be here today because-- >> it takes publishing companies that are multi-million dollar companies to make standardized tests and companies make money and charter schools and the kids are the ones who suffer. >> what about that? what about teaching to the test line. do you buy that? >> two things to keep in mind. and one is the amount, and the second one how many tests have been taken. should your youngsters take the exams in high school, perhaps not. as low as 3 or 4? i don't think so. so the number's probably somewhere in the middle, somewhere around, you know, 6, 7, 8. and i think at the end of the day, about 40-some odd days left in this legislative session they wi'll get it right. >> rather than rolling it back, is there a way to cut down on the number of tests to keep the standards high?
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that's the point. >> i think you could do both. keep the standards high and making sure they have rigor in math and science and social studies and reduce the test from somewhere 15, to somewhere mid range of 8. and two in each of the subject areas. and two in math, two in science. and two in english language arts and social security. >> sounds good to me. thanks for coming out. i appreciate it. >> good to be with you, thank you. >> volleyball star gabrielle reece taking heat and saying men and women should go back to the old days where men were in charge and women were submissive. did those days exist? and jackie robinson breaking the color barrier coming to the big screen. did you find out about his faith in god off the field? we'll tell you a lot more about that coming up. >> get off the field.
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♪ >> here at "fox & friends," this shot of the morning, and he was abandoned at birth. and taken to an animal shelter and bonded right away with the chihuahua and the two are inseparable, like the gorilla
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and the kit p. they play together and even feeds them once in a while. >> tucker: we want to be clear, it's not a mere cat. it's an muercat. >> anna: got to put the emphasis on the right syllable. >> clayton: and gabrielle reece, she rolled this out and said to be feminine, soft, receptive and look out, here it comes, submissive. she of course the world champion volleyball star gabrielle reece. >> tucker: there's not a submissive woman on the planet. my reading, it's not a question of being submissive,
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but appearing submissive. it takes a stronger person to say that. and a brittle one who could shatter, but in the household-- >> you're saying it's okay to appear submissive. my friends from the south said the best way to run the house, appear as if the man is making all the decisions and-- >> it's his idea for everything. why does it always have to be about the south? >> because in the north the women say hey, that's not your idea, that's mine. >> tucker: there's not a household i have h households i've seen where the woman doesn't have the majority of power. >> anna: and she had this in the book and she had to come back after the firestorm, i'd like to be clear, submissive
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in the ways of service, not that i do the same job as a man and expect to be paid equal. not the work place. >> anna: that's a fine line to walk and women can be seen as overbearing and a witch, starts with a b and rather than just a strong woman who is career oriented and everything else. but her perspective comes from a biblical perspective and she's been married for 17 years so maybe we should learn something from her. >> tucker: truly strong people don't anyway, men, women, workplace, bedroom, whenever, and truly strong people. brittle fragile people running around telling you how strong they are are the first ones to collapse they're not strong. >> clayton: trying to overcompensate for something. let us know what you think about gabrielle reece's comments. >> 8:35. time for your morning headlines. this is new video of john
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kerry meeting with japanese leader. and kerry is coming off of a meeting in china yesterday which vowed its support. and today wraps up his four-day tour of asia. one person is still missing after an avalanche in the mountains of washington. the 60-year-old man was with two other experienced hikers at the time, but both made it out alive. according to one of the climbers, i mean, it came on them absolutely with no warning whatsoever. he was carried about a thousand feet. >> anna: one of the men has a shoulder injury and the other a hamstring injury. the line that made 007 famous almost never one. >> i admire your luck, mr. -- >> bond, james bond. >> anna: an early draft from the first james bond book, ian fleming, author, originally was called to call him james
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sectent. and in the famed dr. no those are your headlines. >> clayton: let's check in on the global warming. >> tucker: this is supposed to be spring, instead of picking up the ballpark they're sweeping up snow. crews shovelling after a baseball game at target field in minneapolis, minnesota, they got several inches. and janice dean, all around good person, is tracking the snow for us. what is this? >> that's right, it's the never-ending winter. even though i'm a meteorologist i'm supposed to embrace all types of weather, we are so done with winter. so done. and they've got a game today. the twins and the mets. and we're expecting more snow. i mean, the boys of summer have to shovel. shovel ready in minneapolis. let's take a look at the maps where it's cold, cold enough
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for snow across the rockies, the northern plains, the upper midwest, i mean, it's been 31 in minneapolis for hours now and they're not going to get out of the freezing temperatures. below that cass, 60 in member sis and dallas. not only are we expecting snow, but because we have the clash of two air masses, the springtime weather across the south and cold weather across the north 0 we see the potential for severe weather. look at the blowup of storms, across the gulf coast, that's the low pressure moving into parts of louisiana, mississippi, florida panhandle and even though he they need the rain, a the lot of it in a short period of time. flood watches and warnings are posted and there's the next weather maker, bringing snow across the midwest and talking severe threat. sunday, monday, tuesday, wednesday, the threat for severe weather, including winds and hail and some of the same areas hit last week and that's an area we were mentioning, look the at the snow and unbelievable, 6 to 12
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inches across the rockies and upper midwest and northern plains and it's just ongoing. i wish i could take my magic wand and make it springtime everywhere, but unfortunately we're digging out. >> anna: wave your fingers or wiggle your nose. >> i thought people i could do that, doesn't work. >> clayton: it's cute, but hasn't resulted in weather patterns changing. >> i can do a little dance, but again, doesn't help much. >> clayton: thanks, janice. the tale, speaking of baseball legend jackie robinson hitting a home run at the box office with the new film "42" if it's snowing and you can't go to a real game, the movie is powerful. it's a story though about faith. watch. >> i want-- do you think god likes baseball, herb? >> what the hell is that
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supposed to mean. >> it means some day you're going to meet god and inquire why you can't take the field against robinson in philadelphia and you answer because he was a negro, it may not be a sufficient reply! >> here to weigh is in contributor father jonathan morris. i saw some sports writers saying they were bothered by the movie in that it sort of sluffed aside some of the hate they heaved on him. there's a lot in the movie. and they didn't gloss over the faith aspect of the movie. >> the story is amazing, just going back and reading about jackie robinson, right, to think that just 1947. >> anna: it wasn't that long ago. >> there were negro leagues for baseball, and how far we've come in the country thanks to god and colonel of people like jackie robinson and the president of the brooklyn dodgers who decided
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this was the right thing to do. and then he -- and the story goes, that he chose jackie, not only because he's a great baseball player, but knew that his faith and his character was going to be up for the great task of putting up with a lot of ridicule and hate. i'm so happy that this film did not gloss over, as you said, clayton, this important aspect. >> anna: jackie robinson really believed he was chosen by god, too, and that he believed that the leagues should be integrated and all that. a lot of times we give hate to the mainstream media for leaving religious out. they almost can't and aren't leaving out in their reviews and keeping the faith in. >> he would get down on his knees every night and pray and when he took on the responsibility to be the first negro in the major leagues, he said i'm ready to turn my other cheek and i've got two
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of them. ready to take the heat because he said that's what jesus taught me. so it was very much a part of his life and because he did it, we are in many ways a much better country. >> clayton: so what was his faith specifically? >> he was methodist, as well as the president of the dodgers, the brooklyn dodgers, metoedist. i loved the fact that they put it in the movie and also, i think, make a point that faith in movies actually sells. in my opinion it's because that's part of life and an important part of life. when you get rid of it. the human story doesn't make-- the bible stories that we just witnessed and this movie and so many others, when it's done professionally, when it's done
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well, when it's part of the story and you don't leave it out. that resonates with the human soul. happy sunday. >> tucker: next on the rundown, a magical moment at disneyland. >> a little girl's wish for her father to come home from afghanistan comes true. the entire family will be here. >> and what are you doing with your 401(k). what kind of contributions, are you making? do you have the portfolio? fox business network's lori rothman is here with the five mistakes you don't want to make. ♪
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egg, there are key things you should not do. here is fox business's lori rothman. >> when it comes to your 401(k), don't skip out on the plan and how much to contribute to it and if you can, avoid borrowing from your 401(k) plan. you know all of that stuff, but other things to keep in mind, don't try and play catchup. the investments call it chasing returns. if you delay putting money into an investment plan or took time off don't take maximum risk to try to make it up for it, it's worse for the risk than the sum. >> and determining your ultimate saving goal and uncommon investments. >> right, don't simplify your portfolio don't just do mutual funds and straight stocks. you want stocks from a variety of industries, a variety of sizes, companies and also some bonds, and safety plays,
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precious metals as well. if you do work for a public company, do not own more than 5% of your company's stock in your own investment portfolio. >> smart. >> remember enron, that was a disaster. >> cutting things on stupid stuff, starbucks. get your coffee at your house and save brown bagging it. >> a lot of us who are young will brown bag it or will not brown bag it, rather, and overspend on starbucks and you want to make sure you're cognizant how much money you're spending in which asset class. it might sound confusing, a simple rule of thumb. take your age, subtract from 110. the remaining number percentage to put in more riskier stocks. in you're 25 years old. 85% of the 401(k), in stocks, and the rest-- >> that's a good statistic.
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>> doing the math. >> clayton: be wise about your smart phone, people think that spending this amount of money and finding out, $110 a month is fine and cut back on a lot of these areas. >> smart phone, coffee, your extra money that you're spending, you mentioned brown bagging and try not to panic getting back to the market if you do have a bad quarter because that could be the equivalent of selling low and buying hi. as you know, that's the worst thing you can possibly do. in other words, if you say, let's say cashed out on 2008 when the recession got underway. you would have missed out on the bull run. >> yeah, we saw 401(k)'s plummet and panicked and got scared, but if you left it alone you're back higher than what you were. thank you. >> thank you. >> clayton: and terrorist suspects out for revenge, colonel alan west weighs in on a violent confrontation in
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guantanamo bay and a magical moment at disneyland. watch this. >> a girl makes a wish for her daddy to come home from afghanistan, she looks up, he's there. that will be next. ♪ my mantra? trust your instincts to make the call. to treat my low testosterone, my doctor and i went with axiron, the only underarm low t treatment. axiron can restore t levels to normal in about 2 weeks in most men. axiron is not for use in women or anyone younger than 18 or men with prostate or breast cancer. women, especially those who are or who may become pregnant and children should avoid contact where axiron is applied as unexpected signs of puberty in children or changes in body hair or increased acne in women may occur. report these symptoms to your doctor.
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>> a l1)nnal0 : nice to see you here at "fox & friends." what happens when you take magic of disney and a little girl with snow white wishing her daddy comes home from afghanistan? take a look.
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>> make a wish. >> awesome. >> baby. >> that look like a fairly tale, doesn't it? 4-year-old reuniting with her daddy after he returned from seven-month deployment. joining us is 4-year-old alyssa with her parents. good morning. >> good morning. >> welcome home, too. you just got back a month ago. and what an amazing piece of video we all got to share. and see that moment. mom, how did you pickbe disney land? i understand this is the last place you vacationed together? >> correct. it's her favorite place on earth. we thought the last family trip there. why not reunite there. we knew she would like it. >> little alysssa, if she can
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tell us what a dream come true. can you tell us, alyssa? how amazings of the be with snow white in the process? >> did you like being with snow white? >> yeah. >> yeah? >> is she one of your favorite princesss? >> what did you think when you saw daddy? were you happy? >> hmmm. >> won't get a lot from her this morning. early for her. >> dad, what was it like for you to be there and make it such a spectacle. you were gone for seven months. and your return to be reunited with your kids was like this. >> it was pretty special for me. we didn't really plan on it turning in to a spectacle. i just has. we wanted to make a good memory for alyssa. she was missing me a lot when i was gone.
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we wanted to make it big when i got back. >> we can see her sitting on your lap, cuddling up to you. we see a video there of her holding her daddy deployment doll. while you were gone, you experienceed some rough waters, semily. really, you ran over an i.e.d. and you were pretty shaken up from that. how are you adjusting now that you're back home? you got home on the 18th. it's be about a month now. >> i am doing great. thank you for asking. >> what has life been like for you? how are things with the famil family? are you enjoying your wife's cooking? >> absolutely. >> i don't cook a whole lot. >> he is the cook. we're happy he is home. >> thank you for your time. have a fantastic sunday altogether. >> thank you. you too. >> appreciate it. 8:56 is the time. more "fox & friends" in two minutes.
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>> anna: nice to have you with us on "fox & friends." i'm anna kooiman. sunday 14 of april. 9:00 now. terror suspects out for revenge. gitmo detainees use makeshift weapons to attack guards at guantanamo bay. the latest on a violent confrontation as the u.s. camp in cuba. >> remember, when the president said this -- >> no family making less than $250,000 a year, will see any form of tax increase. >> tucker: i bet you believed him, too, didn't you? it turned out to be completely false. we have the new taxes that will hit you this year coming up. >> clayton: ticketed for driving in the left lane. should slow pokes have to pay for hogging up the fast lane?
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i say yes! details in the new proposal and your responses to this. coming up. "fox & friends" hour four starts right now. it's four hours? ♪ ♪ good morning. welcome in. we hope you have your coffee. how many cups of coffee have you had? i'm on seven. >> anna: how many are in a venti starbucks? i had that plus one. >> clayton: >> people are preparing for tomorrow. tax day. they are up all day dealing with the taxes. are you slowpokes on your taxes? >> anna: every year. every year i say i'll be better and i just had an e-mail from the accountant saying i'll send you few follow-up questions today to get things done. i'm so bad. >> tucker: i am so intimidated by the i.r.s. i won't even use the term on on-air. taxes paid. >> clayton: tomorrow, of course, tax day. there are some new big taxes
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coming your way. but the idea that the middle class wouldn't be paying extra taxes has been a big plank in president obama's campaign in the first time he ran in 2008. this is the last time he ran in 2012, against mitt romney. the president said this. see if this holds up this day. listen. >> no family, making less than $250,000 a year, will see any form of tax increase. if you make less than $250,000 a year, the folks making $250,000 or less would not see the taxes go up one dime. not up with dime. you can't balance the budget on the back of middle class family. >> clayton: not raise at all. any form of tax increase. >> anna: right. but the payroll tax increase happened on the first, is something that everybody is feeling across the board. everybody. the other thing is with president obama new budget proposal, it would increase
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taxes by $1 trillion. >> guess where a lot of those are coming? from tobacco users. many of them addicts, most poorer than average, less educated than average. if there is tax that is going to hurt people and needs every dollar is tobacco taxes. but we're so defen dept on tobacco taxes if everybody that smokes gave up smoking tomorrow, the government would collapse. they're addicted to tobacco money. the proposed tax hike is 94 cents a pack. >> clayton: the free lunchs. if you look like google, and a lot of companies are starting this. employees don't to leave. this is an incentive to work there. google has free lunch programs. you go to the cafeteria. part of the employment. yahoo has this. it would come out of your paycheck. incentive to work at the company, innovators. we sell technology in united
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states these days. that is one of the biggest export. tax these company and hit them in the wallet on top of everything else. >> anna: right. there is a trickledown for their employees or the consumers, or possibly both. >> tucker: speaking of tryingal down. >> anna: new rain tax going in maryland making a splash. take a listen to this >> we lost 30,000 people, thousands of businesses closing shop that can't compete in a state where built in the price is a tax on business. it's only passed on to the end consumer. so folks are leaving. whether the tax and spend liberal crowd that lives in the world of intentions will realize there are real world results. there are middle class folks, small and large businesses that will lewd their job. this is not utopia. people will be hurt by that.
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so if you own something that gets wet when it rains you will pay higher taxes in the state of maryland. thanks by the epa regulations. the federal regulations. i'm hoping that only people who make over $250,000 a year in maryland get wet. when it rains. i presume poor people don't get wet. the middle class doesn't get wet when it rains, does it? >> clayton: never. you know what i'll buy for my house if i lived in maryland, i would leave but i'd spray the weird repellent on the windshields that beads up and rolls off. my yard didn't get wet at all. >> tucker: cover the state in parafin. in every level, in ways you never would have thought of, taxes lunching, taxes rain. the government is desperate for cash. there is a cost and you bearing it. finding ways to soak the population. people making over $250,000, the freded 1%, the rich people we hear so much about that we all hate, they don't have money to pay for that stuff. it's inevitable that they will
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be taxed to pay for this. >> this is something that the taxes that hit everyone. the gas taxes going up across the country. the prices are $3.40 for national average of gasoline. there are states that look at the gas taxes across the country. take a look at some of those. that i believe we have on the map. does your state possible up on the map? take a look. >> anna: or not. >> clayton: your state may pop up. it's theoretical because we don't have the map. it would show washington, montana, montana. some states we wouldn't expect. texas, south carolina, new hampshire. >> maryland has you said. >> anna: not just these states but the ones around them. south carolina was lit up.
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people will drive over the border because the gas is cheaper in south carolina. if that is hyped up, you can't get cheaper gas. >> people do it in pennsylvania. they go across the bridge to go to new jersey. >> anna: are you saying that people change their behavior in response to tax rates? >> i know. it's shocking. >> be you can tax at any rate and they won't change. >> unless there is a whiskey rebellion. >> we're long due for one. >> anna: right. 7 minutes after the hour, sunday morning. now to other stories making headlines this hour. in reports that a former justice of the peace will be charged with the murder of two texas prosecutors and one of their wives. eric williams was arrested yesterday for making terroristic threats and he is held on $3 million bond. yesterday, f.b.i. ats spent hours ceremonying three storage units in connection
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with the murder. they collected evidence from his home and home of his in-laws. >> my god, they took a bunch of stuff out of there. it was in the plastic containers. >> anna: williams has not formally been named the suspect in murder of mike and cynthia mcclellan but he has been questioned several times. like a scene from a movie, notorious armed robber makes explosive escape from a prison in northern prance. he took four guards hostage early saturday and used explosives smuggled inside by his wife to blast through five prison doors. once outside the gates he released the hostages and sped away in a get-away car which he later set on fire. a man hunt is underway. louisiana based meat company expanding recall over
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fears more meat may be contaminated. they are taking back 468,000 pounds of roast beef, ham, turkey and pork from 1 13 states. they say think worry it could be contaminated with listeria to cause fever and muscle aches. so far no, illnesses have been reported. face it, women don't find full beards attractive. some do. according to a new survey, women think men with beard look more aggressive. associate that with lower romantic attachment. okay -- so that is a different story. so instead they prefer men with heavy stubble. men on the other hand say they like the macho look that comes with a beard. those are the headlines. don't you love it when boy goes through puberty, 14 years old an just starting to get stubble. >> tucker: whispy. >> there is a would be viking
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inside all of us. i don't know how the z-z top guys get along at home. most people are not in to it. maybe the rock -- >> anna: every girl is crazy about a sharped dress man! you know what? that was a lengthy set up for that. >> thank you. >> tucker: home run. that's teamwork. coming up next on the show, has the pentagon and the world's most powerful military gone p.c.? alan west weighing in on that next. >> you might want to move over. the new proposal meant to motivate slower drivers to get the heck out of the fast lane. it can't come too soon. we'll be right back. ♪ ♪ ♪ in the name of love ♪ ♪ l us why you used priceline express deals to book this fabulous hotel. well, you can see if the hotel is pet friendly before you book it.
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violence at guantanamo bay, detainees with presidential treatment covers the security cameras and use the makeshift weapons against the guards. why are suspected terrorist given perks like satellite television and computer games to turn arp and attack our military? is this a problem caused by leniency and attitude. joining us now is allen west, the director of next generation tv. thank you for joining us. >> it's a pleasure. >> having spent a career in the u.s. army. do you see the political correctness as threat to readiness? >> absolutely. this is an incredible threat. when you look at what happened in guantanamo, this is a symptom of greater issue. political correctness. i was in guan tan know in 2011. i was there at camp six.
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the fact we gave the privileges to the men captured on the battlefield, and putting our, you know, military soldiers, sailors, airmen, marines in a dangerous situation so they were able to make the weapon, batons and things of this nature to confront the soldiers ^wa. was more troubling was that one of the lawyers, representatives for these prisoners said they took the wrong measures at guantanamo bay when they should have been going in trying to negotiate with the terrorists, the men captured to battlefield. we were trying to make sure that the hunger strikers were taken care of. that is something severely permeated the country. it's a reason why you see a chubby face 20-year-old shooting the spit balls at the united states of america from north korea. >> well, that is a good point. now you, i know, spent time if you were stationed at forthood for a time. what do you make of the hassan trial? clearly an islamist. didn't hide it. well-known to people around
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him and he wound up murdering all these american service men. the army doesn't seem aware or willing to admit he act on religious ground. why? >> i think the army does, but there are people in the administration that does not want it to happen. major hasan should have never been transferred from walter reed to fort hood. we knew he was proselytizing against the united states of america and he had a relationship with anwar al-awlaki. he stood there on the table, shouting and if there is anybody at guantanamo bay it should be major hassan. we're going on four years and he has not been brought to trial. the ips dept was declared work faist violence. the official d.o.d. and the department of the army report, this is heinous. you know about the fact that the 13 seasonals and the apartment of army civilians killed and the other 30 wounded are not allowed to get purple hearts because we
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believe it would effect his trial. >> tucker: the obama administration said women will serve in infantry and combat units. they have had physical standards in training. do you think the standards will become the same? or fighting different wars? >> i believe that you heard the chairman of the joint chief of staff talking about how they justify the standards if the females are not able to pass the test. we see that happening already. with marine corps infan tri office and basic. it's the same, the liberal progressive, social utalitarinasm crept in the administration. if you see an administration more interested to don't ask, don't tell or women in combat arms units what message do you send to the enemy and adversaries. they see us as being weak now.
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they see it from the person at 1600 pennsylvania. that is again, look at the situation in syria and what is happening in libbia and mali. we had ambassador to the two former navy seals in benghazi. we are not trying to hunt it down. we're sending a terrible message to the enmies. >> to sum up, it sounds like the purpose of the military is win wars, not affect positive social change. colonel west, thank you. >> that is the purpose. thank you. >> nice to be reminded. >> tucker: want to pay your respects to the 9/11 memorial in new york city? from now on you literally have to pay. is that fair? meet this pint-size small business owner. 5 yores old and already earning living by taking his his neighbor's trash. that is a great story. he joins us next. ♪ ♪ ♪
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welcome back. quick headlines for you. good news at the pump. experts predict gas prices will drop to average of $3.63. paying your respects. those looking forward to a visit to the 9/11 memorial have to pay $2 fee. the non-product group thatover sees the memorial said it applies to all reservation made in advance or on the phone. that's in addition to $8 toll
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to pay to come in the city. >> anna: it is beautiful, though. ♪ ♪ >> built that. in this case, it's a pint-sized entrepreneur getting early start at running the own business. >> other kinder guardpers get ready for school or playing video games, joe jarvis takes his client's trash to the curb. there he is. job he held for a year. five years old. >> i'm hiring him. the father carl will join us live from houston. nice the see you guys. welcome to the show. >> good morning, joe. i love that you put on a suit and tie for us. you dressed up. how did you come up with the idea to go out and move people's trash around to raise money? >> i like to help the neighbo neighbors. >> you also like -- >> and because i get to, i get
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to buy myself lego sets. >> anna: and pocket watchs seem to be a reason behind this. dad, what made you do this rather than let him use his allowance, say? >> a debate between allowance and something creative. we have didn't want to get in a situation where he felt like he was entitled to the money. my wife happened to read about this idea in a magazine. we thought it was a great idea to start a business and foster entrepreneurship and self-reliance that go with that. >> fantastic. joe, i am looking at the garbage cans and they're bigger than you are. how heavy are they? >> it depends how much trash they put in. >> have you had trouble moving up? >> it's like if it's full it's heavy. then my dad helps.
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but if it's half full i can take it. >> now i understand. >> unless they put something like a prick in there. [ laughter ] >> that would be bad. >> come to our house for those. >> how much are you charging to move the trash out once or twice a week? twenty-five cents? is that how much you are charging? >> something like that. >> twenty-five cents a condition. >> i am going out on a limb here, joe. i will say you are charging too little. >> my wife and i forget to put out the trash on a regular basis. recycling can. we look at each other. we forgot, i would be happy to pay you upward of $5 to $10. >> is that your brother or your assistant? who is that? >> that is my brother.
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>> he sometimes likes to, he likes to pull out the trash can. one time we went to our papa's house and he is just pulling on a trash can. when it wasn't time to. >> anna: oh, boy. why would he do that? you say you don't want to pay him yet, because he is so young he will swallow the mup. that was so cute. >> or lose it. >> anna: what do you want to be when you grow up? >> i'm not sure about that yet. >> i think you could syndicate this business around the country. get other kids. i would -- i want you to move to my neighborhood is what i'm trying to say. if you create a business, syndicate this somehow and franchise it. i would be thrilled. >> how many lego sets have you
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been able to buy with the money, joe? >> something like -- like ten. >> fantastic. >> there is an expensive one. after my mom things i get enough money she goes on the computer. but then like we gave them and but then like -- >> it costs more, right? >> yeah, i add up my money to take longer to get it. sometimes i have to add up all my money. >> nature of shopping. >> it's like i only have to get one penny and then i go and buy one. you dote know how much it is. >> joe, i hope my 11-month-old daughter is watching. i hope she is learning a
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lesson to make money. joe jarvis is the name. write it down. we'll hear from him in the future. thank you. carl, thank you for bringing joe on. >> thank you for having us. >> what an inspiration. i love that. >> did you raise money as a kid? >> absolutely. mine was weed-picking. i made 25 cents every 15 minutes. >> i picked up the dog refuse. the dog bombs for many years. >> tough way to make a living. >> good job for mom and dad for doing this. great. >> unbelievable. rather that letting them feel entitled. they are working for what they get. occupy wall street kids could learn from that. coming up, math test, science test and mandatory drug tests. should it be a school's responseability to keep your kids clean? e-mails pour in about that. tickets, left lane. should the slow drivers have to pay for hogging the fast lane? tales on the amazing and much-needed reform coming up.
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♪ ♪ >> tucker: welcome back. time for the shot of the morning. being a ball gig seems like a sweet gig, right? hey! it has its pitfalls.
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especially if you lose track of where you are and run in an outfielder trying to make a play on a foul ball, in front of blue jays' outfielder -- how do i say his first name? raji. he thought he had a foul ball. kansas city royals ball boy. the collision was avoided but the embarrassment is rife. you know what happens -- >> anna: fan interference? what would it be? >> fan interference would be a ground rule. so it would get one run. basically -- yeah, part of the field. so if a bird flew in at that moment and the ball hit the bird, it would be considered part of the field. >> anna: you know that kid is so embarrassed. >> yeah. >> cameras made it worse. >> i was at spring training watching the phillies a ball girl on the sidelines who just decided to pick up a fair ball. it was coming her way. she just adorable oops? but it was spring training and everybody laughed about it. had it be a playoff game,
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ohhh. >> it messes with the statistics, the all-important baseball statistics. yesterday we told you about breathalyzers at the prom. more common than ever. now more and more schools implement mandatory testing for athletics, even drug tests for middle school students. is this a necessary evil? or is it taken too far. it's a complicated issue and a lot of parents who are concerned about the kids in school. there are many terrible things can happen to your children especially as they enter teen years but this seems like the kind of things that the parents should be doing, not the government. not the school. if you are worried test your own kids. >> anna: i have no problem if they find funding for it. it helps for the kids who think i don't want to do drugs or drink but my friends are and the excuse could be my parents will get mad at me. and they say i won't be able to get in the prom.
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so it deters the bad behavio behaviors. other kids could follow suit as well. >> clayton: we had to do breathalyzer for our prom. they had a bag of straws they cut off. you had to wait in line and cut the straws off and stuck it in the thing. >> tucker: how could you not remember that? >> clayton: i must be been drunk. joking. no one was. our parents talked to us. want you to be safe. use your head. i had a good upbring something i didn't think to drive to the prom drunk or do something stupid like that. but it comes back to the parents. it's extra kir extracurricular. not like you go to class. some are implementing it for sports. it's a privilege to be on this particular team, separate from schooling. if you want to be on this particular team, maybe you follow by a different set of
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rules. >> tucker: i don't know. there is something a little bit prison about it. >> clayton: i catch your drift. >> tucker: i have three teenagers. but it does seem like parents don't want to be the bad guy. you don't want to say to the kids i'll breathize you to make certain. so you pawn it off on the school. >> clayton: the problem with a lot of these, high school kids now taking steroids and doing the other things to keep a competitive and especiall eveg field where you have a school that implicit and involved in the prose. to encourage the kids to get as big and strong as you can. other schools have a strict adherence too schools. >> anna: we have to leave it there. we'd love to hear from you. email us. 9:36. secretary of state john kerry wrap up his four-day tour of asia. meeting with japan leaders this morning. topic of discussion, calming tensions with north korea. this comes as the north
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releasing propaganda videos. >> peter doocy will join us live with the latest on the moving story. what is going on? >> tucker, secretary of state john kerry says the focus now should not be on war with north korea but rather peace with them. he says he thinks there is a chance for peaceful solution through diplomacy but he condemned the harsh rhetoric and said the north korea threats and provocations will only further isolate the country and impoverish the people. he made clear if they are beating the drum of war the united states will don't protect the interest with force. >> the united states will do what is necessary to defend the allies, japan, republic of korea and the region against the provocations. our choice is to negotiate.
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move to table to find a region to have peace. >> so the headline is about peace. this is one of miles per hour destruction. the animation shows missiles from north korea to fly several thousand miles east. striking three targets on the mainland a one to sea in the pacific ocean. resulting in fiery explosion. secretary kerry and japanese foreign minister made clear they are on the same page. about the denuclearization of north korea. we heard about that a day after secretary of state kerry told china a key north korean ally if they get on board with the denuclearizing north korea, the u.s. won't have to be aggressive with our defensive position in their part of the world. tucker, anna and clayton, back to you. >> anna: there we go.
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9:38 is the time. now the rest of the sunday morning headlines. this morning, one person is still missing after the avalanche east of seattle, washington. 60-year-old man was with two others and they were experienced hikers. but they both did make it out alive. >> one of the climbers, it came on with no warning whatsoever. carried 1,000 feet. >> one of the me has a shoulder injury. the other a ham string injury. >> doucette you hate being stuck behind the one driver in fast lane? florida lawmakers want them to move over. they allow them to be ticketed if they drive too slow. what ask what you thought about the bill. first up, heidi side this --
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>> mark said this -- >> that is a good point. i have seen other laws in cities that say you drive a mississippi, you have to stay at the minimum speed or get if far right leap. >> clayton: this is the only law in america i'd like to see more strictly enforced. >> check in with janice dean in for rick reichmuth. for a look at the forecast. hey. >> janice: is beautiful day in new york city. gorgeous. the sun is out. temperatures in the 50s. this is springtime in new york. all along the northeast coastline, look at d.c. they are in the full bloom of cherry blossoms. isn't that gorgeous? i wish we had smellovision. it doesn't last long. over in a hot minute. if you live in d.c. go look at the beautiful cherry blossoms. look at the northeast. start off with good news, shall we? feels like spring across the
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northeast. 82 for wednesday. same in new york. take it. 60 for tuesday. 68 on wednesday. boston, doing well with 50s and 60s. the east coast looks good. central u.s. we have potential for the severe weather. for some reason, my map -- there we go. >> springtime in new york swept a lot of moisture working its way in across the gulf coast. look at the snow. across the northern planes, the northern rockies. blizzard warning for parts of north dakota. ice storm for south dakota. we could see six or 19 or 18 inches of snow. we have could see severe weather today, for wednesday and thursday for the central u.s. the same areas that were hit last week. friends from ohio love it in new york city. this is the best place to be. >> thank you. >> it has been seven months
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since her son sean smith was left to die in the deadly terror attack in benghazi. all she wants is answers. why is she being told to keep quiet? she will join us next. >> anna: and his new -- the new rather tax code could be hilarious. the next guest thinks the 74,000 pages is full of laughs. we'll tell you why. that is up next. ♪ ♪ [ male announcer ] there are only so many foods that make kids happy. and even fewer that make moms happy too. with wholesome noodles and bite sized chicken, nothing brings you together like chicken noodle soup from campbell's. it's amazing what soup can do.
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shoot. now with the share everything plan from verizon, connect your camera, along with your smartphone and tablet. all your devices connected by one simple plan on the powerful network. record video. connect more. so you can do more. the share everything plan from verizon. add additional devices like the samsung galaxy camera for $5 monthly access. u.s. tax code is growing and growing and getting more complicated. according to the next guest, it's 74,000 page of unintentional comedy. here to explain is murdoch, fox news contributor and nationally syndicated columnist. deroy if you can make comedy out of tax code you are a jee jeepous. there is comedy built in because we have difficult math. if you look at this, this is
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shock we make sense of this. >> this is a standup routine to make you want to cry. for example, there is a part of this is how you calculate the valuation of the death tax scenario. to do it, there is a very interesting formula. that lays out how to calculate this. >> this is on the screen. to figure out the evaluation you need to do this. if you are at the kitchen table, you can't figure that out. you hire somebody to do this for you. >> this look like something they found in a cave. like -- >> some writing. >> cave at m.i.t. in the physics department. >> there is baffling language. it printed out a form, my wife and i did to reassess the property taxes. this is what the form almost looked like. read this for us if you will.
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>> this is an organization that is described in c, 4, 5, 6. >> what in the world does it mean? >> it's circular. this is watching a dog chasing its tail. >> my wife is the smart up with in the family and i'm the dumb up with. i can't figure it out. i don't know what to do. it hand it to her. i don't know what to do. >> the source is presser steven willis at the florida law school who has a category, tax humor. he finds amazing examples of this thing. >> this keeps growing and growing and growing. 100 years ago they proposed income tax, we had a total of the 400, to 500 pages of the tax code. that is 57 pages copies of war and peace without the happy ending. >> we should dump the tax
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code, go to 10% flat tax. no exceptions. send us 10%. see you next year. throw all of this overboard. >> make leeo toylstoy weep. >> good to see you. >> happy tax day. >> you as well. coming up on the show, it has been seven months since sean smith was left to die in a deadly attack in benghazi. all she wants is answers. why is she told to keep quiet about it? she will join us next. m breathi. so now i can help make this a great block party. ♪ [ male announce ] advair is clinically proven to help significantly improve lung function. unlike most copd medications, advair contains both an anti-inflammatory bronchodilator working together to help improve your lung function all day. advair won't replace fast-acting inhalers for sudden symptoms and should not bused more than twice a day.
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get your first prescription free mmaybe another headache will get in the way. maybe you'll have some friends over for dinner. maybe you'll have a migraine. if you have migraines with 15 or more headache days a month, you're living a maybe life. and you may have chronic migraine. but knowing this thing you're going through has a name means knowing you can find treatments that are right for you. go to mychronicmigraine.com to find a headache specialist. and don't live a maybe life. still waiting on answers from beeping beeping. the mother of one killed there is reaching out the members of congress for help to say please, please help me find white house is responsible and fix it so that no more of our
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sons and daughters are abandoned by the country they love. pat smith is the mother of sean smith who was killed that day and joins us now. thank you for coming on. >> thank you. >> why can't you get answers, basic answers to why your son was killed? >> they don't want me to know, obviously. they will not tell me. >> "they" being the state department? >> nobody will tell me. i have asked obama, i've asked hillary and panetta. i've asked joe biden. i asked them all. nobody has gotp back to me. i don't know "they" is, but they and their minions don't want me to know. >> nobody has responded to you? >> that is correct. >> one time. well, one time, one person, one clerk from the state department called and started reading me from the time line.
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which i already had. that was it. >> tucker: that is completely outrageous. you reached out the the president, the vice president, head of the c.i.a., former secretary of state and blown off completely. what do you want to know? >> somebody is responsible. somebody blew it and i want them to admit it and come out and say i'm sorry, i blew it. i'll never do it again. that hasn't happened. >> tucker: who in the u.s. government allowed it to happen in other words? >> i don't know. they won't tell me. i have already told you everything i know. everything they told me. everything else efound out on my own and from people calling me. >> tucker: have you been to washington? >> i was there for the reception of the caskets when they first came back from
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wherever it was they -- from bening, i guess. that was it. >> tucker: do you think your son had any inkling that an attack was coming? >> oh, yes. he told me. >> tucker: he told you? what did he say? >> he said we caught somebody outside taking pictures today. it was 9/11 at the time. he says we're worried about it. we have asked for help. there has been no help forthcoming. >> to ask the state department for additional security presumably, right? >> i don't know who he asked. he said we asked them. >> they asked for help and didn't get help. was that the last communication you had with your son? >> yes, it was. >> boy, that is sad. >> tucker: are you in touch with any of the survivors of the benghazi attack? >> no. in the timeline, i mention that the number is 169.
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i'm not sure. two airplanes that took the survivors out of there. but that was it. i heard one survivor at least was in the hospital. friend of mine went to see them. and they were there. i know there were survivors. i don't know why they were there. i suppose it's none of my business. my business is my sop got killed and they won't answer why. >> tucker: that is really a shocking fact. pat smith, joining us. the her of shape american sean smith. -- the mother of slain american sean smith. thank you for joining us. >> thank you. >> more "fox & friends" coming up in three minutes. ♪
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welcome back. we have been talking about this story. florida looking to ticket anybody who goes too slow in the fast lane. move over.
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>> i crossed the line from journallism to advocacy. i'm embarrassed. >> don't be embarrassed. >> i should take a nonline issue but emotion welled up within me. >> clayton: don't feel ashame. it left it behind years ago. >> tucker: good. >> clayton: eric writes us and he feels the same. the posted speed limit is just that. the speed limit. if you are in that big of a hurry, plan your day better by getting up earlier or leaving sooner. i will continue to drive the posted limit in the left lane. >> tucker: eric, call mism would love to talk to you. >> clayton: right. >> tucker: be great. meet me behind the gym. >> anna: the gym. which way is the gym? florida, imagine the productivity saved if the rest of the country followed suit. in the real world, the only speed limit in the left lane is the bumper of the front car in front of you. >> dangerous to go slowly in that lane. >> you are an miles per hour hero. thank yo

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